• Directory
  • FAQ: about JURN
  • Group tests
  • Guide to academic search
  • JURN’s donationware
  • Links
  • openEco: titles indexed

News from JURN

~ search tool for open access content

News from JURN

Author Archives: futurilla

JURN group test: what is history carr

05 Saturday Apr 2014

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, JURN metrics, My general observations

≈ Leave a comment

Spurred by my recent musings on Future Studies, software bots, and ‘predictive intelligence‘, I’ve done a quick survey test by running JURN against other search tools. For the test I picked this search for E. H. Carr’s famous What is History?…

what is history carr

… intending to evaluate the ability to deliver semantic-deductive quasi-predictive search results based only on a very fuzzy ‘possible print title’ + ‘a hint at a possible surname’. A hat-tip to Musings About Librarianship (Aaron Tay) for this search idea.

JURN group test: what is history carr
 
April 2014, using unmodified Internet Explorer 11, not signed in to Google.
Searching for free full-text scholarly articles, theses or book chapters related to historian E. H. Carr. Clicked through on results, and evaluated.
Google Scholar 0 Examined first 50 results. Google Books links were not counted.
DOAJ 0 Used ‘Article’ search. The single result was a false positive for “Carr, L. G.”
JournalTOCS 0 Only 13 results
Ingenta Connect 0 Only 13 results
NDLtd 0 Only 7 results. Appears more generally to have a great many “404 Not Found” links.
Journal Seek 0 “No results” message was surrounded by Google ads.
Mendeley 0 Search ‘Articles’ only, then filtered for Open Access articles only. Mendeley ignored ‘Carr’ totally, and appeared to search only on ‘What’ + ‘History’. Examined first 20 results, 19 of which were science.
OATD 0 Looked at first 30 results. The No.1 result Politics at Its Demise: E. H. Carr, 1931-1939 looked promising, but this thesis proved to have been deleted or moved. All other results were way off mark.
Microsoft Academic 0 Examined first 50 results. Lots of paywall articles, on or from just about every Carr except A. H. Carr!
Digital Commons Network 0 Searched Arts and Humanities portal, then filtered results by ‘History’ facet. Appears to use the same system as OALib, giving many false positives for caricature, carrying and career etc.
CORE 1 Search not filtered. Examined first 50 results. Only the first topmost result was good.
OAlib 1 Examined first twenty results. Many false positives for caricature, carrying and carry. Switching to ‘Author’ search failed to surface A. H. Carr in first 10 results.
BASE 1 Searched ‘Verbatim’ on ‘Entire Document’. Examined first 50 results. Several promising early results proved to be repository records with no link to full-text. From the second page onward there were false positives for history + what and perhaps for carried.
OPENDoar 8 Examined first 50 results. Several valid results arose from approaches to understanding Carr in relation to Trotsky, in old leftist journals.
Google Search 9 Forced verbatim. Examined first 50 results. Didn’t count erudite blog posts (of which there were about a dozen, inc. a couple with footnote references) or Google Books links. Five of the nine counted results were sorry-looking unofficial scans of the famous work itself.
JURN 11   Checked first 50 results. First page of results has seven relevant results. Later false positives were nearly all for other academics named Carr.

CONCLUSION: So JURN is certainly not a magic wand for this tricky search, but it is performing much better than other search tools and vastly better than Google Scholar or the DOAJ. The results do especially well in terms of the accuracy of the first seven results, but thereafter they struggle (yet do at least focus mostly on people named Carr). Across all the search tools it was surprising to see so little cross-talk in the results from academic articles and chapters on Star Carr, a very famous archeological site in the UK. I noticed no cross-talk at all from the history of cars (vehicles) despite my lack of capitalisation on carr.

DATA: The relevant results list from JURN is…

1. Alun Munslow, Book review of E.H. Carr: A Critical Appraisal, History in Focus, Autumn 2001 (Institute of Historical Research at the University of London)

2. Alun Munslow, Review of What is History?, Reviews in History, November 1997.

3. Unofficial scan from What is History?.

4. Richard J. Evans, The Two Faces of E.H. Carr, History in Focus, Autumn 2001 (Institute of Historical Research at the University of London) (Based on his introduction to a new Palgrave edition of What is History?)

5. Table of Contents for the special What is History? edition of History in Focus, Autumn 2001 (Institute of Historical Research at the University of London)

6. Micheal Cox, Will the real E. H. Carr please stand up?, International Affairs, 75, 3 (1999). (Review of The Vices of Integrity, E. H. Carr, 1892-1982).

7. David Freeland Duke, Edward Hallett Carr: Historical Realism and the Liberal Tradition, Past Imperfect, Vol.2, 1993.

~

14. De Lamar Jensen, What is History? Edward Hallett Carr, Brigham Young University Studies, Vol.5, No.2 (1964).

~

26. Philosophy of History article in Internet Encyclopedia of Philisophy. (Mentions Carr in passing)

27. Ann Talbot, Chance and necessity in history : E.H. Carr and Leon Trotsky compared, Historical Social Research, 34 (2009).

28. Political Realism in International Relations article in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. (Carr has his own section in this, “E. H. Carr’s Challenge of Utopian Idealism”)


Why no Open J-Gate in this group test? It died years ago. Scirus also died more recently, at the start of 2014. Google News was tested, but for this search it proved to be useless at this moment in time — although it can sometimes be surprisingly useful.

Good Judgment

04 Friday Apr 2014

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Spotted in the news

≈ 2 Comments

The Good Judgment Project is a four year study organized as part of a government-sponsored forecasting tournament. It is currently moving its 3,000 signed-up citizen ‘future forecasters’ toward the close of its season three, in which…

Thousands of people around the world predict global events. Their collective forecasts are surprisingly accurate.

They have to do a whole load of research of course, it’s not fortune-telling. Hope they know about JURN. They tend to work in teams of about twelve, but the delightfully named Dart-Throwing Chimp is one of those leading the pack. He…

would have qualified for ‘superforecaster’ status in Season 3 had he not joined our research team [to help craft better questions]

The background to this is the broad failure of intelligence-led prediction based on closed information, a topic that can be explored in an accessible manner by listening to the 90-minute Long Now Foundation talk “Why Foxes Are Better Forecasters Than Hedgehogs”.

The Good Judgment Project seems to suggest the best results may come from finding ways to reliably blend the aggregated ‘wisdom of the crowd’ + human-curated Big Data computer models + autonomous bots + time-served human experts. I predict that the area of practical ‘predictive intelligence’ is one that the average researcher is going to be hearing a lot more about over the coming years.

And it might be a field for the Arts and Humanities to pitch a tent in, re: the abilities of creative industries in cultural trend spotting and meme tracking, our advanced ethical tools, the skill-sets of digital humanists, the abundant lessons to be distilled from history, the insights of ethnography and suchlike.

Sting ding

03 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by futurilla in Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Walt Crawford fisks the John Bohannon open access sting and its later reporting, in the May 2014 Cites & Insights.

eBooks for Burma

02 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Undergraduates are now returning to Burma‘s universities, after fifty years of socialism, and a new e-library is there to greet them.

campus

Palgrave removed

31 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in New titles added to JURN

≈ Leave a comment

Removed Palgrave journals from the JURN index, since their generous offer of “all journal articles for free” during March 2014 is finishing today.

It’s a Fact! Nearly…

30 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

New laws in the UK will soon mean that…

scientific Facts can be extracted and published without explicit permission [something that is set to become] law on June 1st.

The Shuttleworth Foundation has a concise round-up of the measures, plus Web links to the British government’s ‘plain English’ PDFs about the new measures. Oh, and that old-fashioned CD-ripping-to-MP3 thing becomes legal too.

Addition to the JURN FAQ

30 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

≈ Leave a comment

Who is JURN for?

* independent scholars and researchers
* students and lecturers in developing nations
* unemployed or retired lecturers
* recent university graduates
* knowledge professionals outside of academia
* business leaders
* public policy makers and planners
* journalists and bloggers
* public intellectuals and ‘think tanks’
* evidence-based campaigners and activists
* amateur historians
* teachers of students aged under 18
* advanced and ambitious students, age 14-18
* home schoolers and grassroots educators

* adjunct or associate university lecturers, seeking a substitute for lost paywall access during the long summer holiday
* university lecturers and students, seeking a straightforward search tool for full-text open access content

Breaking Google

28 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in JURN's Google watch, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Google breaks the Web…

“A Google engineer has developed an algorithm that spots breaking news stories on the Web and illustrates them with pictures.”

NYPL, new hi-res maps collection online as CC0

28 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Nearly 20,000 hi-res maps of America have been released under CC0 by The Lionel Pincus & Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library.

Here’s the press release, which has a download link to a free-registration download service containing the hi-res versions and also links to tutorials on how to use the service.

america-mid-1500s
Above: America mapped, 1545.

Schema.org

27 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, Open Access publishing, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

I had a quick look at the full list of Schema.org tags, which are now available in Google CSEs. They can be used to filter the CSE’s site list, serving to “Restrict pages from the above site list to only those that contain [chosen] Schema.org types”. Handy if you have a huge single site of HTML/CSS/XML that you can grep, and you want to prepare it for selective CSE search without having to juggle directories and file names.

It looks to me like those tagging open access scholarly articles would need to be able to chain Schema.org tags into something like…

CreativeWork: ScholarlyArticle: TransferAction: DownloadAction: GiveAction:

Whereas paywall publishers might need something like:

CreativeWork: ScholarlyArticle: TransferAction: DownloadAction: SellAction:

But at present there seems to be only the basic undifferentiated…

CreativeWork: ScholarlyArticle:

Even if there were workable OA additions to Schema.org, there would still the huge problems of: i) persuading people to add the tags to all their ongoing content at the article level, and to do so correctly and consistently; and ii) to have them go back and accurately tag perhaps two decades or more of existing open access articles.

← Older posts
Newer posts →
RSS Feed: Subscribe

 

Please become my patron at www.patreon.com/davehaden to help JURN survive and thrive.

JURN

  • JURN : directory of ejournals
  • JURN : main search-engine
  • JURN : openEco directory
  • JURN : repository search
  • Categories

    • Academic search
    • Ecology additions
    • Economics of Open Access
    • How to improve academic search
    • JURN blogged
    • JURN metrics
    • JURN tips and tricks
    • JURN's Google watch
    • My general observations
    • New media journal articles
    • New titles added to JURN
    • Official and think-tank reports
    • Ooops!
    • Open Access publishing
    • Spotted in the news
    • Uncategorized

    Archives

    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • October 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • September 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • June 2023
    • May 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • August 2021
    • July 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021
    • March 2021
    • February 2021
    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • August 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • February 2019
    • January 2019
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • August 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • October 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017
    • July 2017
    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2017
    • March 2017
    • February 2017
    • January 2017
    • December 2016
    • November 2016
    • October 2016
    • September 2016
    • August 2016
    • July 2016
    • June 2016
    • May 2016
    • April 2016
    • March 2016
    • February 2016
    • January 2016
    • December 2015
    • November 2015
    • October 2015
    • September 2015
    • August 2015
    • July 2015
    • June 2015
    • May 2015
    • April 2015
    • March 2015
    • February 2015
    • January 2015
    • December 2014
    • November 2014
    • October 2014
    • September 2014
    • August 2014
    • July 2014
    • June 2014
    • May 2014
    • April 2014
    • March 2014
    • February 2014
    • January 2014
    • December 2013
    • November 2013
    • October 2013
    • September 2013
    • August 2013
    • July 2013
    • June 2013
    • May 2013
    • April 2013
    • March 2013
    • February 2013
    • January 2013
    • December 2012
    • November 2012
    • October 2012
    • September 2012
    • August 2012
    • June 2012
    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
    • November 2011
    • October 2011
    • September 2011
    • August 2011
    • July 2011
    • June 2011
    • May 2011
    • April 2011
    • March 2011
    • February 2011
    • January 2011
    • December 2010
    • November 2010
    • October 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
    • March 2009
    • February 2009

    Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: Chateau by Ignacio Ricci.